I kind of went back and forth about this one. I genuinely cared about the resolution, even if I didn't really believe the characters. It was kind of uneven that way. I never felt like I knew the characters, they weren't quite one dimensional, but there were big gaps or stretches of thinness. Still, it was a fun read.
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Not sure who needs to hear this but Bezos and Walmart and all these guys fighting to keep the minimum wage from moving, they desperately want workers to blame anyone but them for low wages. Waving around the vision of "violent illegals" coming for your jobs is meant to distract workers from the fact that they're raking in millions because they don't have to pay anyone a living wage.
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My samba school has a book club and we read Crooked Plow. For reasons, I decided that I couldn't really stick with the book club (The school moved and I can't get to dance classes anymore and it seems weird to just join the book club meetings if I'm not dancing with them, too.) but Crooked Plow is really good and you should read it.
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I'm a little surprised at how long it has been since I added to this list, but I just put Colson Whitehead's Nickel Boys back in the local little free library, without taking a photo of the cover. It's not relaxing or uplifting but it is engaging and painful and infuriating and so very well told.
https://search.worldcat.org/en/title/1107456323
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He showed me the fare -- $85 -- and I added a $15 tip and he rang it up for $100. I asked for a receipt and he said he didn't have one but he scrawled something on a sheet of paper.
The next morning I get a Square receipt for $150. Shows a $100 fare and a $50 tip. I call my credit card company and they reverse the charge. I also complained to the TLC but they said they can't do anything with out a medallion number.
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I miss Twitter today because I know that if I told this story on Twitter it would get resolved. But this cabbie added a $50 tip on an $80 ride and Capital One is letting him get away with it.
I took a yellow cab from JFK to Brooklyn a few months ago. Driver said his console was broken and that he had to run the fare on his phone. I should have clocked that that was suss but yellow cabs are so regulated it didn't occur to me that he would pull any shenanigans.
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@lzg I'm still on the charcoal pencil sharpener beat and I feel like this has potential: https://www.tumblr.com/the-unflappablewolf/769274964076576768?source=share
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My kid told me I'm a Karen who ruins everything because I said he had to exit his bedroom and eat something before he commenced his third hour of Fortnight. How's everyone else's labor day going?
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Elle Cosimano is fun and a little slapstick. Not really my thing, but sometimes a ridiculous mystery that makes you roll your eyes or shake your head is just what you need.
Ann Cleeves is another British police procedural. I almost left this screen shot out because the rest is stuff my kid listened to, but I like Cleeves and I think that there's a Vera Stanhope series on Masterpiece Theater that I would love and the rest of my household would not.
This concludes my little audiobook roundup.
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I love Miranda July and hated On All Fours. I couldn't finish it. I don't understand why everyone loves it. She sets off on this trip that she has no interest in taking, to prove something to her husband who doesn't seem to like her very much. I found the whole story painful. I quit halfway through.
John Banville is another British police procedural. After Miranda July I just needed a story. I like a good murder mystery, and would love some recs that aren't police driven. (Cont.)
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Lindsay Faye I discovered in a free library and I love her.
NK Jeminson is a genius and I think everyone should read all of her books immediately. Science fiction and just fabulous, ornate world building.
Peng Shepherd I'm kind of agnostic on. I feel like I never really believe her characters, but she is still a good writer.
Some of the books in the screenshot are for my kid. I check out books for him when he wants a bedtime story and his queue is empty. (Cont.)
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(cont) People will get it on, very explicitly, before the book is over. It's also just a rich tapestry of a story.
Ian Rankin is more consistent than particularly special. Scottish police procedural stuff, so copaganda by definition. I enjoy him, but I probably wouldn't go out of my way to recommend unless you told me you wanted a detective novel read to you in a lyrical Scottish accent. It does make me want to go on a hiking vacation in Scotland and eat scones in a bracing wind.
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This list feels incomplete. But the last few things I finished didn't feel notable. So audiobooks: I love Kate Atkinson and the way she weaves together these wonderful interlocking stories. I tend to forget how much sex there is in Freya Marske until I'm playing the audiobook on a speaker in the garage, while sewing, and it takes me entirely by surprise. Or I'm sitting in a middle seat in an airplane and it just seems awfully intimate. So, you know, fair warning.
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